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Expert-crafted AI skill documents for building long-lasting Swift applications.
Design, test, and evolve applications using the same principles, libraries, and techniques we use every day at Point‑Free.

What is “isolation” in Swift? We define the term based on Swift’s open “evolution” process and flesh out an example from the proposal to get an understanding of its purpose, and see how legacy tools can lead to dangerous situations at runtime.

We show off some superpowers unlocked by embracing isolation, noncopyable, and nonescapable types by showing how they can be used to add incredible safety and performance to a legacy C API, and we will bring everything together to see how these tools make testing an app that uses Composable Architecture 2.0 and SQLiteData like magic.

It’s time to go beyond the basics with a deep exploration of isolation, noncopyable, and nonescapable types. But before we get into all the nitty gritty details we will demonstrate why understanding these topics matters, starting with a preview of isolation in Composable Architecture 2.0.

We dissect some of the most important and interesting topics in Swift programming frequently, and deliver them straight to your inbox.

We cover both abstract ideas and practical concepts you can start using in your code base immediately.

Download a fully-functioning Swift playground from the video so you can experiment with the concepts discussed.

We transcribe each video by hand so you can search and reference easily. Click on a timestamp to jump directly to that point in the video.
The Swift language has grown over the years and become more and more powerful. It now boosts a comprehensive static type system (generics, existentials…), a suite of concurrency tools (actors, dynamic isolation…), and most recently even ownership capabilities (consuming, borrowing, non-copyable types…). In “Back to basics” we will focus on just one part of the language in order to uncover the deep theory behind that feature as well as provide concrete advice for writing real-world code.
SwiftUI may be all the rage these days, but that doesn’t mean you won’t occassionally need to dip your toes into the UIKit waters. Whether it be to access some functionality not yet available in SwiftUI, or for performance reasons (UICollectionView 😍), you will eventually find yourself subclassing UIViewController, and then the question becomes: what is the most modern way to do this?
Architecture is a tough problem and there’s no shortage of articles, videos and open source projects attempting to solve the problem once and for all. In this collection we systematically develop an architecture from first principles, with an eye on building something that is composable, modular, testable, and more.
If you have ever created a binding using the get:set: initializer, you may want to reconsider. Doing so can hurt SwiftUI’s ability to animate your view. Luckily there is a better way. You can leverage @dynamicMemberLookup and subscripts to derive new bindings in a way that allows SwiftUI to propertly track where the binding came from.
SwiftData is not capable of filtering and sorting by raw representable enum properties in models. Predicates and sort descriptors will compile just fine when referencing enum properties, but it will crash at runtime.
SwiftData is not capable of sorting by boolean properties in models. And if you try to trick SwiftData to allow it, you will encounter runtime crashes.

Three recent @pointfreeco episodes were so interesting I stayed in the treadmill 3x as long as usual and watched them all in a row! Walking may be challenging later/tomorrow... 😮

Honestly, I'm an Android developer, I write applications in Kotlin. My colleague iOS developer told me about your course. And I liked it so I decided to buy a subscription.

Please stop releasing one amazing video after the other! I'm still at Episode 15! #pointfreemarathon #androiddevhere

My new favourite morning routine is feeding 👶🏻 while watching @pointfreeco

This is surely one of the best shows for Swift folks out there! The content and explanation is at a really high bar!

Thanks @mbrandonw @stephencelis for the very pedagogical series with @pointfreeco Excited and looking forward to learn from the series

I listened to the first two episodes of @pointfreeco this weekend and it was the best presentation of FP fundamentals I've seen. Very thoughtful layout and progression of the material and motivations behind each introduced concept. Looking forward to watching the rest!

We have this thing called WWTV at #PlanGrid where we mostly just listen to @mbrandonw and @stephencelis talk about functions.

Their content pushes the boundary of my knowledge, and it's fun to watch!
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